#24-Jeff Gordon was the guest of this week’s NASCAR Teleconference and discussed many topics including the RTA and minimum speeds, the transcript in part:
Q. There was a lot of talk about the Joey Logano crash with Morgan Shepherd and a lot of discussion about minimum speeds and whatnot, and I think 10 years ago at Darlington you had an incident with Andy Hillenburg in which it was similar with a car struggling to kind of maintain minimum speed and you had a wreck. I was wondering do you have any thoughts on should NASCAR look at minimum speeds because I think that the pace was like 16 miles an hour faster than what the minimum speed was at New Hampshire, or are you comfortable with having cars that are running that slow on the track?
JEFF GORDON: “No, I’m not comfortable with that. I don’t think they have any place out there if they’re running that slow, whether you’re a car that’s had damage and you can’t maintain the minimum speed, or is the minimum speed the proper speed. I think it probably needs to be raised up at certain tracks where there’s not a lot of falloff in the tire, then I think that minimum speed probably needs to be adjusted. I don’t know if that really contributed towards what happened with Morgan and Joey. The video doesn’t show everything. You see Joey go by him. Obviously Morgan got loose and got into him.
The tricky thing about minimum speed at a place like New Hampshire, you’ve got cars all around the track. You’ve got a car that maybe can meet minimum speed in clean air, but they’re really never in clean air because they’re constantly getting passed or trying to make some room for the lap cars to go by. How do we truly measure minimum speed because if you do it every lap that they’re getting passed by a faster car, I’m pretty sure they wouldn’t make minimum speed, so I think NASCAR maybe looks at sometimes once they get into clean air are they making minimum speed, and at a place like New Hampshire or Martinsville, they’re never in clean air, and I don’t think they’re ever going to make minimum speed. Those numbers are — NASCAR has those, I don’t. I know that week in and week out there are certain cars that you’re passing very, very often that you’re questioning whether or not they’re making minimum speed or if the minimum speed is really at the right pace.”
Q. What do you think about the owners forming the RTA? Do you see that as a positive or a negative, and if it’s a positive, what are some things that you think they can accomplish?
JEFF GORDON: “Well, you know, I don’t really see where things have changed a whole lot other than it’s more official. They’ve been meeting for years to get together and communicate about where the sport is at, things that they can do to strengthen their teams, be more efficient. I think it’s really just more of an official way to create that alliance, and I think it’s a positive because our sport, in order for it to be strong, the teams need to be strong. They need to be profitable. They need to be able to do business, and it’s turned into a big business, and it’s constantly growing, and so I’m in support of it because if the teams are strong and more successful, then that’s good for us that are part of the team and it’s good for the sport, it’s good for the fans, and so I think that this is definitely going to be something that we’re all going to learn from and grow from, but I think it’s something that definitely is only going to be good for the sport in general.”
Q. I’m not using the word union, but would it be helpful to the drivers if they were organized in the same way the owners are attempting to be?
JEFF GORDON: :Well, I think the way I look at this, this is a team alliance. It’s not an owner alliance. Some people are saying that, but to me it’s what’s going to make the teams more efficient, stronger, more profitable, and to me that includes the drivers. That includes all the employees on each of those teams. I think that it’s in a lot of ways covering us, as well. We’re aligned with the teams. I have a contract with a team and I want that team to be strong because I know if that team is strong, then that secures my position as a driver. It secures our sponsors and only helps us with our partners and our fans.”
(Team Chevy), see full transcript at Jeffgordon.com and see a video of the interview at ESPN.com.(7-15-2014)